Category Archives: Xolani Koyana

Cape Times: Residents vow to return to Philippi

http://www.iol.co.za/capetimes/residents-vow-to-return-to-philippi-1.1509911#.UYSCNKLTx35

Residents vow to return to Philippi

Xolani Koyana

IN BITTERLY cold conditions, Zoe Zulu spent a night in a leaking church with her five-year-old daughter and one-month old son after her shack was demolished by the city’s Anti-Land Invasion Unit on Wednesday.

Zulu is part of a group of more than 100 people who have erected shacks on municipal-owned land on Symphony Way in Philippi East. The informal settlement has been dubbed Marikana.

They have vowed not to vacate the land despite being forcefully removed by the Anti-Land Invasion Unit three times in the past week.

After her structure was taken down, residents provided a mattress and blankets.

She was housed at a makeshift church with a leaking roof.

The Cape Times first reported on Zulu yesterday when she was pictured on her knees with her baby on her back and her five year old at her side. She was surrounded by members of the Land Invasion Unit.

“My son is sick now because it is really cold in here,” she said.

“He has been coughing through the night. I tried to protect them (the children) from the cold, but the church is leaking and the cement floor is cold. I got a few old mats outside to make it better.”

Before she put up her structure, the 36-year-old Zulu had been renting a shack in a backyard in Lower Crossroads, just across from where land had been occupied.

Her cousin had told her that people were building structures and that she would find a spot there.

The first time the Land Invasion Unit came “they saw I had children and didn’t demolish my shack. They said I could stay,” Zulu said.

“But on that day they didn’t even listen, they just took it down.

“I would rather die there. Where else must we go?”

Although it was cold, Zulu was grateful to the residents who had helped her family with shelter.

Others were not as fortunate as Zulu, spending Wednesday night on the dunes where the shacks had been erected.

Yesterday morning residents had already rebuilt some shacks, but the Anti-Land Invasion Unit returned to the scene.

Busisiwe Ngwenze was one of those who had to sleep in the open field. Her materials had been confiscated, forcing her to erect a make-shift tent using plastic sheets. “We are not going anywhere. They say that the land is council land, but we are also part of the city. They should be able to provide land for us, instead of building all these malls,” Ngwenze said.

She said most of the people who built shacks there came from backyards in Lower Crossroads, Nyanga and Philippi.

The City of Cape Town has previously said it would continue to take down illegal structures.

Note: According to the City of Capt Town’s official spokesperson they destroyed 125 shacks on 1 May, 11 on 2 May and four on 3 May. They claim that they were entitled to destroy these shacks without a court order as none of them were inhabited. This is a straight forward lie.

Cape Times: ‘Shacks burn – we need houses’

http://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/western-cape/shacks-burn-we-need-houses-1.1008246

‘Shacks burn – we need houses’

January 5 2011 at 10:41am
By Xolani Koyana
shack fire

Lulama Saki, with son Akholiwe, 2, was among 72 left homeless after a fire ripped through 31 shacks in Doornbach near Dunoon. Photo: Gareth Smit.

Lulama Saki has had to pick up the pieces three times because of shack fires.

On Tuesday she was rebuilding her home which was among 31 shacks destroyed by a blaze at the Doornbach informal settlement near Dunoon. For the third time in 12 years she has lost everything to fire.

Although officials were to investigate the cause of the fire, residents alleged that one of them had been cooking in his house when he left the stove unattended.

Shortly before 1am the man shouted that his house was on fire, residents said.

Firefighters were called to the scene and the fire was brought under control before 2am, Cape Town Fire and Rescue said.

Saki, who lived in a four-room shack with her husband and two children, was one of 72, including 27 children, left homeless as a result of the fire. No deaths or injuries were reported.

“This is the third time my shack has been destroyed since we moved here in 1998.

“We are grateful for the new materials but even if we rebuild there will be another fire, what people need are houses,” Saki said.

She said they were asleep when a neighbour knocked on the side of her shack warning them of the fire, which had already reached their shack so they could not save anything.

“When we went outside to check what was happening, we saw people scrambling trying to save their belongings.

“When we went back inside the fire had already destroyed one side of the shack.

“Everything was destroyed, the only clothes we have are the ones we have on right now.”

Another resident, Welcome Mendile, only managed to salvage a television and a radio.

“When we heard screams I went outside to check what was happening, the fire was already gutting the shack in front of our house. It reached us so quickly we could only take the TV and radio.

“Everything else went with the fire,” Mendile said.

Less than three months ago a fire destroyed 50 homes and left more than 200 people homeless in Doornbach. – Cape Times